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Articles

Is Christianity a “Chinese” Religion?

[…] Lambert, China’s Christian Millions. 6Aikman, Jesus in Beijing, pp. 245-262; Samuel Ling and Stacey Bieler, Editors, Chinese Intellectuals and the Gospel (Phillipsburg, New Jersey: P&R Publishing, 1999). 7For conversions to Christianity by Chinese living in North America, see Fenggang Yang, Chinese Christians in America: Conversion, Assimilation, and Adhesive Identities (University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania University […]

Blog Entries

The Chinese Bible

History, Challenges, and Recommendations

Current Use More Christians read the Chinese Bible than most other translations of the Scriptures. Tens of millions of Chinese Christians within China and elsewhere see this as the Word of God. They read it, memorize it, reverence it, and preach from it. History–Danger and Difficulty When Robert Morrison was making the first translation of […]

Book Reviews

Where East Meets West

[…] the close of each section end up covering most of the basic articles of Christian faith in a highly practical manner.  These analyses alone are worth the price of the book and lift the debate about contextualization to a higher plane.  Going beyond platitudes, Lane outlines principles that should inform any future consideration of […]

Book Reviews

Practical Advice for Chinese Relationships

Encountering the Chinese: A Guide for Americans by Hu Wenzhong and Cornelius L. Grove. Second Edition. Intercultural Press, Inc., Yarmouth, ME, 1999, 208 pp. ISBN 1877864587, paperback. Cost: $21.95 at . Reviewed by Sarah Doyle and G. Wright Doyle Encountering the Chinese is, as the subtitle suggests, a guide designed specifically for Americans who […]

Book Reviews

China’s New Confucianism

Politics and Everyday Life in a Changing Society

Daniel A. Bell, China's New Confucianism: Politics and Everyday Life in a Changing Society. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-691-13690-5; hardcover; 340 pages, including two appendices, notes, and bibliography. Reviewed by G. Wright Doyle

Supporting Article

How Should Chinese Urban Churches Organize Themselves?

[…] question of the proper place for Christians to meet together for their main gathering, which is usually on the Lord’s Day, and also how churches should be organized. We shall base our study as much as possible on the Bible, though we shall also consider other factors. Biblical Basis for House Churches The word […]

Editorials

Perspectives on Confucianism

[…] into a fascinating, complex and enormously important subject. Notes ^ Fenggang Yang, Chinese Christians in America: Conversion, Assimilation, and Adhesive Identities (University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1999), 44. ^ Yang, 51. ^ Yang, 154. ^ NYTimes Sinosphere blog, February 13, 2014, Xi Touts Communist Party as Defender of Confucius’s Virtues, by Chris Buckley. Image Credit: Les Whittle

Book Reviews

The Christian Faith in Chinese Culture

A Book Review

[…] to understand why Chinese intellectuals have accepted, rejected, or modified the Christian message since the time of Matteo Ricci. Paulos Huang has given us a fine, clearly- organized study with a great deal of thought-provoking findings and suggestions. As the author points out at the very beginning, Confucian-Christian dialogue is crucial in today’s China, […]

Supporting Article

A Chinese Christian Critique of Confucianism

Chang provides a Christian understanding of the nature of Confucianism, its classics and the basic teachings of Confucius. This is followed by a critique of Confucianism from a biblical standpoint using classical theological categories (God, creation, man, sin and salvation and eschatology) to frame his comments. He also discusses a key component of traditional Confucianism, ancestor worship.

Supporting Article

Confucian Comeback

An Interview with Fenggang Yang

[…] Yang: We need to think of multiple layers, starting from the grass-roots, bottom up, such as elementary schools up through high schoolI’m only talking about the better organized schools. Private Confucian schools (si shu) have become a kind of movement. They try to be independent from the state system; though their legality is ambiguous, […]